Toshiba Mini NB305 review

If there's been a Renaissance man in the world of first-gen netbooks it'd be the Toshiba Mini NB205. Its long battery life, comfortable keyboard and attractive and sturdy build distinguished it from the others, even when it made a late entrance to the little laptop market last year. Like most manufacturers, Tosh has gone and refreshed its knockout netbook with Intel's Atom Pine Trail platform and slightly altered the design. But has the competition caught up to the $399 Mini NB305? Or does the Mini NB305 still hold a place in our hearts as the most versatile netbook out there? Find out after the break in our full review.
Look and feel


Keyboard, touchpad and screen

We appreciate that the touchpad is larger than most, and features dedicated right and left mouse buttons instead of a cramped rocker, but the multitouch pad is too sensitive and we were constantly zooming in on pages. We've become quite speedy at switching off this function in the Synaptics menu -- a skill that we're rather proud of.
The 10-inch, 1024 x 600 resolution screen is bright with just the right amount of gloss, and actually looks better than most when it comes to viewing angles. We didn't have to make any real adjustments to share the screen with a friend. The display may be the best we'll ever get on a netbook. Too bad it's surrounded by a thick bezel -- although its pattern does nicely match the lid.
Performance, battery life and software

| PCMark05 | 3DMark06 | Battery Life | |
| Toshiba Mini NB305 | 1272 | 156 | 6:30 |
| Acer Aspire One 523h | 1310 | 154 | 6:31 |
| ASUS Eee PC 1005PE | 1431 | 157 | 8:10 |
The Mini NB305's 5300mAh, 61Wh six-cell battery lasted 6 hours and 30 minutes on a video rundown test with brightness set to 65 percent, and about eight hours during our typical routine of web surfing, chatting and writing. Now, don't get us wrong: six hours of movie playback is really good, but it isn't close to Toshiba's predicted 11 hours of juice or as good as the Eee PC 1005PE's eight hours on our video test.
Tosh has loaded up the Mini NB305 with its proprietary software as well as the typical free trial of Norton, and a few of the programs are actually quite useful. ReelTime seems a bit of a slap in the face to Windows 7's multitasking functionality, and places a toolbar along the bottom of the screen with shortcuts to commonly used programs, open applications and files. Bulletin Board lets you post notes or pictures on a digital board, although it's probably more useful on a touch-enabled screen. The only really peeving app is the Webcam Assistant, which is set to permanently hide on the side of the screen. We're not self-haters or anything, but we found no use for taking our picture several times a day and disabled it immediately.
Wrap-up




























@Ondnxtlvl
Ordered NB305, 2GB RAM, and Kingston 128GB SSD from Amazon. OS upgrade came via our corportate agreements with MS. The only thing that was tricky was getting the Toshiba drivers (I did a complete clean install of Win7) as they were not available from Toshiba web site (at least that I could find). Used the recovery process to load the Toshiba drivers and applications to 2GB USB flash drive and only instlled about 1/4 of them in the end.
I think the next thing I will try is to partition the SSD install ChromeOS as a second operating system.
Yay! The hard disk is user-replaceable on this (unlike Assuuus 1005P) >:(
I wish this thing had ION + HDMI then i could consider buying it.
Anyone who knows how much more ION platform cost compared to a normal netbook ?
Would be interesting to know why there are not more companies investing in ION specially since it offers such good performance (i got a ION box with Atom 330 and it rocks).
Yes, replacing both HDD and RAM are trivial. HDD requires a small Torx bit, RAM is two Phillips scres.
Does anyone know if you can use the NB305 battery in the N205? I wished they started with the battery that sits flush in the back. Anyways, I have a 205 and really want the battery. If anyone know, please let us know! Thanks!
I ordered an NB205 in December but canceled my order when I heard they were coming out with the NB305. BIG MISTAKE. The NB305 does not have bluetooth service. I can't connect a wireless mouse without a dongle. DAMN!
Does anyone know if there is a spare mini pci-e slot assessable?
This chipset is pretty weak but others like Dell and HP are including a Broadcom Crystal HD chip
Just got this thing and I can't believe how bad the keyboard is! All the reviews (including this one) rave about it, but it misses presses constantly. Especially the space bar is bad: if you don't press it exactly in the middle, it doesn't register. (There is probably just 1 microswitch underneath it in the dead center and that does not get triggered if you push the bar a bit more to the edge).
Yes, it looks nice, and yes, it's nicely spaced with big buttons, but come on Engadget, how can you have missed this? Did you do actual typing on the thing?